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#118801 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#118802 | |
Special Member
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Darryl F. Zanuck purchased the work-in-progress in December 1946, right as The Razor's Edge, starring Miss Tierney and Tyrone Power, was starting to amass huge box office receipts. At the time, Tierney was one of Fox's hottest contract players: Leave Her to Heaven, released on Christmas Day, 1945, was Fox's highest grossing film of the 1940's and netted her an Academy Award nomination as Best Actress. Her subsequent film, Dragonwyck, had originally been scheduled for release in the fall of 1945 (and in fact had already been enthusiastically reviewed by the press), but had been held back at the last minute; after seeing the rough cut of Leave Her to Heaven, Zanuck had been convinced Tierney would not only receive a nomination, but would win the Oscar race. He wanted Dragonwyck to benefit from Tierney's expected Oscar win in March 1946. She lost, of course, but Dragonwyck was nevertheless a huge box office hit when it hit theatres as Fox's Easter attraction in 1946. Somewhere I have notes regarding the subject matter of Sturges' The Matrix, but I can't lay my hands on them at the moment. I vaguely recall that the title referred not to anything scientific, but instead was a playful nod to the concept of motherhood and the womb. And speaking of the Criterion Collection, where's The Lady Eve on blu-ray? ![]() |
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#118803 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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The reason why Paramount kept control of Morgan's Creek is explained by Blu-Velvet here. |
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#118804 | |
Blu-ray reviewer
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FINAL PRESS SHEET
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Thanks given by: | Edward J Grug III (01-16-2015), jw007 (01-16-2015), mbarto (01-16-2015), Meek12345 (01-16-2015), Scottie (01-16-2015), The Great Owl (01-16-2015) |
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#118805 | |||
Blu-ray Ninja
Nov 2013
Norwich, UK
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![]() The more hours th better though, mean I can treat myself more haha! I have so many Criterion to catch up on! Just happy I finally have the book and LY@M on Bluray finally! |
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#118807 |
Banned
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#118808 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I've noticed that Criterion's special features are, in general, not as plentiful as they once were. I'm not necessarily complaining. Quantity doesn't automatically equal quality after all.
My reason for bringing this up is that some titles have only one or two relatively short interviews for extra's (The Vanishing), while others like Sword of Doom and the upcoming The Friends of Eddie Coyle basically only have an audio commentary for extra's. What with them also switching from booklet's to leaflets as well, some titles are lacking enough in the supplements to warrant being $29.99 ($14.99 on sale) titles, but aren't. All of this is pointing to Criterion falling on hard times, financially speaking. If they weren't, surely some of these titles with not much to speak of would be one of their budget releases. I don't mean to sound ungrateful. I'm really not complaining. In fact I love audio commentaries in particular and I can recognise that even though they're "only" one extra, they amount to a wealth of information shared over the length of the feature film. This is all just something I've found interesting. They're really minimising their packages and there hasn't been a great deal of effort put into cover art lately. All the more reason to support them though if they haven't been able to afford such lavish packages like once upon a time. Just out or curiosity, does anyone agree that there are some titles that could've been one of those lower priced BD's? And if so, which do you think? |
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#118809 |
Blu-ray Champion
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No, it is with Universal. Universal owns nearly all the sound era films Paramount made in from 1929-1949. Miracle stayed at Paramount because, like the silent films, there was no way the purchaser could show it on TV in the 50s.
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#118810 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Hopefully this isn't the case. But over the last year or so I've also noticed some strategic marketing moves from Criterion to survive in the home video market. Obviously the Dual-format experiment was a failure and they prob. took a hit from that. The recent "bronzing" fiasco of blu-rays produced in 2010 and recall of defective discs prob. didn't help them either. The cutback on booklets inside new releases and less use of paper is prob. another sign they're trying to save money. However, in the example you stated of "The Vanishing", Criterion was able to get director George Sluizer interviewed just months before he died, so that was a major win. Overall, I see a slight downward trend, but I'd say its extremely minimal right now.
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#118811 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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That both Sword Of Doom and Eddie Coyle are upgrades would suggest that the lack of extra material isn't reflective of Criterion's current financial state either, given that they were released in that state originally. |
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#118812 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#118813 |
Expert Member
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When the heck will we get Red Sun?
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Thanks given by: | Roninblues (01-16-2015) |
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#118814 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#118815 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I think, like Adam said, it has more to do with the fact that a title like Eddie Coyle didn't have much on its original DVD release. I just bought the DVD not too long ago and won't be upgrading. The PQ is pretty strong and there is no sense in upgrading for a commentary track that I won't listen to.
I don't know how it works exactly, but some time between the 2009 release and the Blu-ray release, CC either paid to include an existing commentary or arranged for Yates to record a new one. That is not evidence of a struggling company. |
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#118816 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I saw the links in your signature..... How about A Patch of Blue for the Criterion Collection? (or anyone really!) Every time I see Sidney Pottier on TCM, he is just mesmerizing. I thought the few minutes of APoB that I saw were great... haven't seen the whole thing. Would love to have it on blu!
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Thanks given by: | jmclick (01-16-2015) |
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#118817 |
Moderator
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TCM will be having a Buñuel-athon beginning at 8 P.M. EST on January 26. Films included:
Belle de Jour The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise Diary of a Chambermaid Viridiana The Exterminating Angel |
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Thanks given by: | mrjohnnyb (01-16-2015), soarinsteven (01-16-2015) |
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#118818 |
Blu-ray Duke
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#118820 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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